4.5 Article

FUNCTIONAL OUTCOME IS IMPAIRED FOLLOWING TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY IN AGING Nogo-A/B-DEFICIENT MICE

期刊

NEUROSCIENCE
卷 163, 期 2, 页码 540-551

出版社

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2009.06.042

关键词

traumatic brain injury; Nogo-A; Nogo-B; Morris water maze; neurological motor deficits

资金

  1. NIH NS [NS RO1-40978, NS P50-08803, NS RO1-56485, NS RO1-39962]
  2. Swedish MRC
  3. Uppsala University Hospital
  4. Swedish Brain Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Increasing age is associated with a poor prognosis following traumatic brain injury (TBI). CNS axons may recover poorly following TBI due to expression of myelin-derived inhibitors to axonal outgrowth such as Nogo-A. To study the role of Nogo-A/B in the pathophysiological response of the elderly to TBI, 1-year-old mice deficient in Nogo-A/B (Nogo-A/B homozygous(-/-) mice), Nogo-A/B heterozygous(-/+) mice, and age-matched wild-type (WT) littermate controls were subjected to a controlled cortical impact (CCI) TBI. Sham-injured WT mice (7 months old) and 12 month old naive Nogo-A/B-/- and Nogo-A/B-/+ served as controls. Neurological motor function was evaluated up to 3 weeks, and cognitive function, hemispheric tissue loss, myelin staining and hippocampal beta-amyloid (A beta) immunohistochemistry were evaluated at 4 weeks post-injury. In WT littermates, TBI significantly impaired learning ability at 4 weeks and neurological motor function up to 2 weeks post-injury and caused a significant loss of hemispheric tissue. Following TBI, Nogo-A/B-/- mice showed significantly less recovery from neurological motor and cognitive deficits compared to brain-injured WT mice. Naive Nogo-A/B-/- and Nogo-A/B-/+ mice quickly learned the MWM task in contrast to brain-injured Nogo-A/B-/- mice who failed to learn the MWM task at 4 weeks post-injury. Hemispheric tissue loss and cortical lesion volume were similar among the brain-injured genotypes. Neither TBI nor the absence of NogoA/B caused an increased A beta expression. Myelin staining showed a reduced area and density in the corpus callosum in brain-injured Nogo-A/B-/- animals compared to their littermate controls. These novel and unexpected behavioral results demonstrate that the absence of Nogo-A/B may negatively influence outcome, possibly related to hypomyelination, following TBI in mice and suggest a complex role for this myelin-associated axonal growth inhibitor following TBI. (C) 2009 IBRO. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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